New 24/7 UF study center set to open
By Paige Fry | Apr. 11, 2017After five years of lobbying, planning and constructing, a new 24/7 study center at UF is scheduled to open next week.
After five years of lobbying, planning and constructing, a new 24/7 study center at UF is scheduled to open next week.
Starting May 1, bus routes across the UF campus and Gainesville will be reduced and changed due to funding and construction.
On the second day of Passover, the most practiced Jewish holiday in the U.S., White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer compared the Syrian government’s use of a chemical weapon to attack its own people to the Holocaust, arguing that Adolf Hitler “didn’t even sink to using chemical weapons” on his people.
There’s an ailment afflicting young people today. It’s not a disease or a behavioral epidemic, but an idea. It is an idea that affects our entire approach to intimacy. It stems from our phobia of discomfort, of appearing foolish or being declined. It is the idea that there exists such a thing as a “right moment.” Allow me to elaborate.
The human race is intrinsically a selfish bunch. When we’re born, we are strictly self-serving. We exist only to keep ourselves alive and to advance ourselves to the point where we can do this without help. We communicate our needs by crying, screaming or doing whatever it takes to get our parents’ attention, and once this is complete, we just head on back to whatever we were doing before we decided we needed something.
I ended last week’s column with an image of a man limping through life with a broken leg. I made the comment that this image captures the problem with our cultural dictum: “Believe in yourself.” The meaning behind my comment is twofold. First, people generally suffer from self-doubt, a certain awareness that all is not well within one’s self, or from an inability to feel affirmed, confident and whole. Second, the solution to this problem cannot be believing in one’s self because the problem lies primarily within the self. Thus, the image of a man who thinks he can mend his leg by walking on it.
At the front of a middle-school auditorium, 27-year-old Kristen Reaver faced-off with 61-year-old Republican Rep. Ted Yoho.
As Century Tower’s bells echoed across the crowded Turlington Plaza on Monday, four students collapsed to the ground.
In the top of the fifth inning, sophomore Kelly Barnhill zoomed a ball toward home plate.
A change in scenery has done wonders for some of the former Gators in the NBA this year. For others, it has done the exact opposite.
We don’t know anything.
There’s a disturbing trend happening to the Gators: too many one-run games.
Before it closed at 6 p.m., Do-Lish had to start turning people away.
Karolina Weclawska is preparing to study moss in Poland as the first undergraduate from UF’s School of Forest Resources and Conservation to receive a Fulbright Study/Research Award.
About 300 UF students signed a pledge Monday to recognize that non-consensual sex is considered sexual assault.
As droves of Jewish students and locals alike gathered for Passover in Gainesville on Monday night, the holiday meant something different for each.
A UF student organization with five world-championship wins in robotics is hosting a seminar Wednesday.
Nick Simmons will get the chance to see a performer who has helped him improve his own comedy at the Reitz Union on Wednesday.
As the school year rounds off, it can become easy to fall into the slump of “could have beens” and “didn’t do’s.” This, perhaps, hits graduating students the hardest, but no one is immune from the curse. It is the end of things that causes us to look back, after all,
I am the son of a PGA professional and would like to offer a rebuttal to the Monday Matters article regarding the golf industry. The article is unsurprisingly lacking statistical evidence of waning golf interest, probably because there isn’t any. First, the article claims, “Nobody really wants to watch golf.” In fact, the PGA Tour reported a 22-percent increase in viewership in 2016. Second, the article claims that golf has a difficult “learning curve.” The PGA has instituted many new initiatives to make the game easier for beginners, including the Tee It Up program. While we’re at it, let’s talk about this difficult games popularity. The article poses golf as the sport for “out of shape old guys”. Interestingly, the PGA says 2.2 million people tried golf for the first time last year and 73% of them played again and again and again. Now, the money. Yes, golf is a big business with a worth of $70 billion, but it also has an annual charitable giving of $4 billion. And the average price of a round of golf is $36. This article was an attempt at a hot take, one that was so ill-researched, those who don’t golf could even read it as click-bait.